Novice Spammer
Gender:
Posts: 101
0 credits Members referred : 0
« Reply #2 on: Sep 01, 2005, 08:55:19 PM »
i code about 95% of my client projects in XHTML, and I don't think it's difficult or time-consuming to learn at all. If you can handle HTML4, XHTML should be no problem.
Credit Thief
.com pimp
Posts: 1118
0 credits Members referred : 0
« Reply #3 on: Sep 05, 2005, 07:45:28 AM »
Ok, I'm going to learn it then. The book I got teaches both but I just used html.
He's The Man
Novice Spammer
Gender:
Posts: 100
0 credits Members referred : 0
« Reply #4 on: Sep 18, 2005, 12:21:53 AM »
Well if you know html then xhtml is pretty much the same thing. The tags are just a bit different but you won't really have to "learn" it. You just need to make sure you know the valid way of coding it.
Novice Spammer
Gender:
Posts: 100
346 credits Members referred : 0
« Reply #5 on: Sep 19, 2005, 11:57:25 PM »
I didn't even know there was much of a difference. There is so much about web design I need to learn, it is quite discouraging
I am a metal monkey!
Administrator Community Supporter?
Jedai Sword Master
Gender:
Posts: 8029
41131 credits Members referred : 3
I wish I was an Oscar winner
Posts: 90
560 credits Members referred : 0
« Reply #7 on: Dec 16, 2005, 02:03:17 AM »
I definitly recommend XHTML, search engines can crawl it with more ease, it almost always displays better, and generally loads faster. Also, XHTML isn't hard at all to learn or to follow.
I am a metal monkey!
Administrator Community Supporter?
Jedai Sword Master
Gender:
Posts: 8029
41131 credits Members referred : 3
« Reply #8 on: Dec 16, 2005, 12:14:11 PM »
The difference in the speed is huge.
Try this: Visit a category of this forum, and open in another browser the same category in the RSS form of it (which is xhtml) The same queries will run in the database, but the speed is almost double when you open the html page.